Amazing PET FRIENDLY No-Mow Lawn Substitute - Ruschia 'Nana' (Dwarf Carpet of Stars)
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- Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
- If you are looking replace your thirsty grass lawn with something that is drought tolerant, pet friendly, super hardy, low maintenance, and you don't have to mow?...this is one of the absolute BEST possible choices. Rushia lineolata 'Nana' commonly known as Dwarf Carpet of Stars has most of the other lawn alternatives beat by a landslide. It can take temps up to about 120 deg. F, so for you folks in those hotter climates, this is for you! It's also hardy down to about 25 deg. F.
Ruschia is easy to plant and even easier to take care of. Buy Ruschia in flats and plant them about 6 inches apart and in about 5 months, you will have a full 'carpet' of a lawn to run and play on! It's totally great for pets too!
Ruschia needs a good amount of water when it's establishing (more info in video!), but after several weeks, it's incredibly drought tolerant and only requires watering about every 7-10 days in the warmer months.
Make sure to prepare your area well and give it soil amendment if necessary. Be sure the soil is well-drained. Fertilizer is not always needed when planting Ruschia, but it does help keep the foliage super vibrant. Use a 15-15-15 fertilizer.
Thank you so much for watching, and please feel free to leave a comment if you have any questions about Ruschia.
For online purchasing, visit
www.budgetplant...
Happy planting!
- Dom
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Looks nice and easy for maintenance ❤ i have preparing what to do with garden … and lawn mowing, weed etc were bothering me 😂 Thanks for the advice.
I dont know how I got here but my mind is absolutely BLOWN!!!!!!
Same actually.
UA-cam algorithm is the modern liberal arts major😂
Thank you for mentioning its cold hardiness right at the beginning of this video. Nothing's more frustrating than listening to all the amazing qualities of a plant only to find out later that it's not perennial in my location!
I agree it's no good in the UK, 20-30 degrees is the rare bit of summer here lol x
@@georgieshelton2318 I'll see your worst and raise you a bunch more. 😝 40 to -35 C at my location in western Canada!
I’ve seen patches of this growing in our yard in Florida and I LOVE it! I love the way it has a cushy feel when I walk on it, and it’s pretty!
I literally told my husband we should try to fill the whole yard in with that and he thinks I’m nuts. Wait till I show him this! Too cool!
He would be sad, he won't get to do manly things like use a lawn mower, and spray chemicals everywhere.
@@wulver810 lol the lawnmower yes, but we’re not chemical people. We’re on the water and worry about the animals with the run off. That’s why our st. Augustine is full of patches of this and other things that don’t belong lol.
So? After you showed him, what did hubby say?? 😳
@@PhantomFilmAustralia he did feel it’s a good idea!
Do you know how the plants hold up to big rowdy dogs chasing each other on it?
they are used on rooftops here because it will cool the buildings down because it filters UV and retains moisture
That’s so cool! Where at?
@Janitor Queen thanks for watchin! In Southern CA there are some great rooftop projects in which Ruschia has been used, more by commercial contractors. I don’t personally have any photos but there may be some found online. But it is definitely a viable option for warmer climates.
Roof tops cool 😉 I want that !
I am definitely an adult if I am awestruck by a lawn substitute.... damn.
I am in south florida and the grass grows insanely fast in the summer, and on top of that my dog is allergic to grass, but loves to run on the lawn. Just the mowing costs alone are a game changer.
It can. In longer periods of rain it may show some yellowing but should green up after.
@@BudgetPlants Where can I get it in south florida?
You may not be able to get it over there currently. It has not been released nationwide.
@@BudgetPlants I would love to purchase this for my Florida lawn. Is this some newly patented plant? Why can't we get it in Florida?
Hi Lisa! We actually may start shipping out of state in the next few months, which would include Florida. Standby!…
I’m sharing this with my mom. She lives in south Texas so everything died because of the freeze. She was just talking about having to replace EVERYTHING. It broke her heart.
I went thru the same thing. But this looks fantastic!!
How did it work for her?
The heat/sun would not be a problem. But if winters get below 20 deg f, it could be detrimental for the Ruschia.
I'm a plant nerd, and I approve this message.
What is this grass ? Can it be used in Florida
Great video! Fantastic info for people that aren't gardeners. Blending in soil amendments prior to planting, spreading a pre-emergent for weeds prior to planting, really great points. I really enjoy your videos and learn a lot from them. Best regards
Thanks so much for the kind words!! Really appreciate it, and very encouraging 😎
We have it underneath a big tree at a feet above the ground. Nothing but weeds grow there otherwise. But this sweet darling. And we're almost done with getting the weeds out too. Easy to maintain, can skip a watering better than most, stays closed. Wonderful plant! Plus it blooms real nice.
Awesome!! 🙏🏼🙏🏼
I was so excited for this and then you told me the temperatures. 😭
Sorry Northern States this ain't it.
well, thanks for saving me 10 min at least ;)
We just have moss in the front yard. Not by design, but doesn't require mowing much
I was so excited as well... I was about to ask, what happens at 0F? does it all die, or does it just go dormant?
Yup. I was going to send to a friend who is putting down turf...but hates grass. Useless for Canadians. 20F = -6.6C
min temps go below 20 and max temps go above 120 here. lawns don't like deserts, go figure. got anything that stands up to teenagers doing donuts on atvs?
Please Don't blow my mind, I just got it back from the repair shop, from last time!!!!!!!!
It looks like a succulent.
It is a succulent
It's a mesemb from the west coast of South Africa, as usual its rare and threatened due to unwise grazing and habitat transformation, all the while everyone seems to be solely focused on climate change..
It is. Think "Tiny Iceplant".
It's a beach succulent! They grow near beaches and can handle pretty high and low temps!
@@GoldenBoy-et6of I didn't realize succulent was an actual plant name I thought it was a typo or something.
I was thinking succulent like scrumptious yummy and such.
Guess I'm a bigger dummy than I realized lol
I don't know how or why this came up on my recommended but I am so glad it did.
You have me convinced to give this a whirl! But...you just did what I thought was IMPOSSIBLE! You convinced my wife! Thank You!
Ha! Awesome! It’s a fantastic little plant. Definitely worth a shot.
Golf course: ok I’m listening.
I wish golf courses would use this instead of grass. The maintenance of golf courses is an environmental disaster. Plus it's noisy and probably interrupts people playing. I'm not a fan.
Love the idea, but does it stand up to the golf cart traffic?
I would imagine it can take some golf cart traffic. Prolonged traffic in a specific area would definitely show ware.
The balls dont roll very well across it, its varied depth. The bounce is freakin awesome tho!
@@comfortablynumb9342, Ruschia is not going to take that much foot traffic. There is a big difference between occasional adult foot traffic and someone walking there daily.
Love this video. I suddenly want to replace every inch of my grass with this stuff.
Me too lol and I’m going to do it
I agree, on my walks I’ve seen this Around certain houses and it is the best. It’s great because there’s little flowers and no mowing. It’s the perfect blanket for running, sitting, laying out etc. When we buy our house I will definitely be using this.
Amazing. I see this growing in my flower beds from time to time and pull it, thinking it's weed. Did not realize it's a suitable ground cover. Great video!
Where has this been all my life?!
Excellent explanation, thank you for the instructions on prepping site and planting. This should work well next to a pool in a high fire hazard area in zone 10A.
This is a great idea in between my raised beds
My thoughts exactly.
I'm thinking the same thing but I'd be worried about it invading into the beds.
@@fluffycritter you can maintain it by clipping it. It doesn't look like it spreads out very fast.
If you have a shady lawn or at least part-shade, try White Strawberries. Seriously. Evergreen here in Zone 6! Gets up to 6-8", and stands up to the pups. Good news is it feeds the bunnies and bees, too. Super good news is that it'll take over a shaded/part-shade lawn, meaning you don't have to get rid of the lawn ahead of time. Of course this means it'll take a few years, but it's a hella lotta easier.
Regarding PRE-EMERGENT use ... if you do it wrong //at all//, it's a fertilizer for the weeds instead of an environmentally safe killer. Be very, very careful.
as somone who is lazy this looks like it would be amazing
Hahaa yup it really is.
We have it here in Australia and it’s often used in/on sand dunes to help the sand from eroding
Hey sarah, good day! What do you call them in Australia? I live here in Brisbane, googled it but nothing for sale. Maybe we call it differently here. Thanks
@@lelov1392 looks like a dwarf variety of pigface, which is a native Auatralian plant.
Maybe she’s referring to pig face
@@lelov1392 oops late reply lol we call it pig face 🫣😂🌿
but that has huge finger type leaves
COLD WEATHER GROUND COVERS
I am in Canada and my favourite ground cover is creeping Jenny. It is a bright, light green, grows very quickly, close to the ground. It is very short and forms a mat. There is also Periwinkle that grows a little bit taller. It has dark glossy leaves and purple flowers. Both of these are exceptionally hardy even though our winters are often well below minus forty degrees. If you want a hardy ground cover that comes in a variety of colours, creeping phlox is another that is easily grown here. It comes in white and different shades of pinks and purples. Forty degrees below zero is where Fahrenheit and Celsius are the same.
Hi Snow Fleas, I'm in NY & was wondering what I could use for my area. Do you have any suggestions on the creeping Jenny re: how much I would need & prepping the area (was thinking of taking out the little grass I have now. Thanks
@@rhondafountain648 Hi Rhonda,
I was surprised to hear from you. I am in Ontario, Canada. I can't find the post of mine that you are responding to. I checked the You Tube video and the stuff on there is good for 20 degrees and up. We get temperatures below zero here as I am sure you do too.
The ground cover that I have grows very close to the ground and forms quite a thick carpet keeping the weeds down. I was told it is not creeping Jenny and is called the money plant. It is not the silver dollar plant. My mom used to grow that. I am not sure if that is the real name for it. It has round leaves about the size of a penny and they are a bright light green. The green is closest to the inside colour of a lime, not the skin. I was given a very small flower pot of it a few years ago and as it spreads, I remove bits and plant it where I want to keep the weeds down. I was warned that it can be very invasive, so don't plant it where you don't want it to get out of control. I find it is easy to pull out and plant in other areas and when it sneaks out onto the yard it gets mowed with the grass. It also gets little flowers in late summer but I can't remember if they are pale yellow or white.
I think it is called moneywort. I just found some pictures that look like what I have. I am not sure now, where to send you to get some. I would try local nurseries or landscaping places. I know that our little town plants it in pots along our main street and allows it to trail out of the pots like ivy. Mine does great even with winters that dip to more than 40 below.
I hope this is helpful.
Good luck in finding some in your area. I am sure you will love it as much as I do.
Vicki Henderson (Snowfleas)
I think it’s best to find native short plants so they can survive without watering and you aren’t potentially introducing something invasive and it can be of use to your areas insects. Try flowering things too.
Theres many different ground cover succulents native to the oregon Washington and California coasts! I live in Oregon and this gave me the idea to go collect a bunch of em and replace parts of my lawn with the ground cover, I live only a few hundred yards from the beach and get ocean mist all the time around my property and the conditions are basically beach conditions!
This is a pretty sustainable option for folks looking to ditch their lawm! Don't have to water it as much, don't have to mow it, don't have to use weed killer, etc excellent video 👍
Why am I sitting here calculating how much time, money, and effort it’s be to replace 32 acres… LMAO
Oh lord🤦🏾♀️😂
Hahaha because the struggle is real 😂😂😂
Doing the same thing but for 25 acres rofl
lol replace it? I gotchu just sell it to me loo
Cattle.
WOW :-O This is PERFECT for my climate in So Oregon !! Lows in the 20's, highs in the 110's. Cannot wait to do this
Would probably work well in the Central Valley in CA too where there is currently a drought.
Did you go ahead with it? I'm also in Oregon so I'm curious.
@@BJGvideos me too!
how did it work out? I see southern oregon reaching in the 20s almost every year for a few days lol
Ruschias are gorgeous succulents however, they’re from So. Africa. If you’re ripping out your lawn, explore what’s native to your area as local plant species have nowhere left to go these days and the creatures that depend on them also becoming rarer.
🙏❤️
You're so right. I'd rather plant buffalo grass. I did in Tx and my lawn, barely watered/mowed, was greener and tougher than everyone else's augustine.
@@Tsiri09 I love buffalo grass!!! - especially when it starts going to seed. So pretty! I’m in NM so it is a native here as well!
@@Tsiri09 I’ve never heard of Buffalo grass, can you get it in Canada?
Native wildflower mix
@@maxineboxer9714 Check out what's native in your area. The reason buffalo grass works so well in Tx is because it's native to that area - as in, it grew up in that area so it's adapted to growing in that area without human intervention.
This is beyond awesome! I have it, I put it in myself and my soil was not very good. It is thriving and it is blooming right now. There is a way to make it less bumpy!
How to make it less bumpy?
One of the best speakers out there. This guy can sell. I am going to plant these between concrete pavers.
Hahaa thanks!! This stuff sells itself :) Ruschia between pavers is a great look. Just give it at least 5-6 inches of good quality soil. I recommend drip line between pavers.
Wow....you just changed my life dude 😳 I just may end up doing this! Thanks so much!!!
Hahaa awesome!! Yeah it’s a great plant. It’s been doing well at my house for a few years now and going strong. Would never go back to lawn now 😎
They work great and saves so much water and time. It can take a year to really fill out but don't hesitate
I'd be interested in other alternatives that can survive the colder zones. I hate grass and cutting it even more. We have really deep ditches.
Some sort of moss
Cover it with wood chips, put in some raised beds and grow food
We have clover and I like it. U still have to cut but not as often.
Definitely moss. Its native to wherever you are, which all gardeners should be paying more attention to these days.
@@annalorenzo75 same. We've left the grass, but we have been over planting with white clover. We mow less and need a lot less water. Bonus: no dead dog pee spots.
I never water my lawn now. That looks great but I don't want to dig up my whole lawn.. Too much work. But Thanks great video...
What type of grass do You have?
Being in Iowa.....I’m crying with tears of sadness! This looks amazing
My front yard is eternally grateful to your video and i am a follower to your channel ❤❤❤❤!!
Ahhhh awesome!! Really glad I can help :))) 🌱 ❤️🌱
@@BudgetPlants Do fleas or ticks like this grass? I have cats 😬
No fires or ticks. Not a good habitat for them.
Here in South Africa we have the regular (giant) variety. It grows on the sand dunes on the costal areas. As kids we used to eat the fruit. Oval pods a bit like figs inside.
They are all from the cape
Another species called sour fig has a fruit that tastes like Fanta grape
Love the vid and your breakdown is amazing. I am in South Africa and I hope this will stand up to the african sun, but def keen to try it out.
Thank u!!!! Yes the heat is not a problem for Ruschia so long as the soil has been prepared properly.
It's actually native to South Africa, specifically the Western Cape.
What a great, green groundcover! Thank you very much for making this video. I am definitely putting this in my front yard.
Thanks for watchin! 😎
I don't have a lawn. I just like this.
Thanks, Budget Plants 🌱 You’ve made a compelling & educational case for Rushia Lineolata ‘Nana’ 🌱 it looks like you could sweep it 🧹 with a velvety soft broom ☺️
I love ice plants (Ruschia, Lampranthus, Drosanthemum, etc.) but in the Phoenix area they don’t do well during the summer. The nights are just too hot. This is such a cool idea though. It looks beautiful!
Okay, I was going to ask. I am in Phoenix as well. So this won't survive our summers? Is that what you are saying? We do get 120 on occasion but not all the time.
Hey guys.. Ruschia can take 20-120 deg f. It’s actually used frequently in Las Vegas as a lawn alternative and I know weather patterns can be sun to Phoenix. I would say it’s definitely worth a small test area in Phoenix.
I want to see a variety, selected not engineered, focusing on the spring and resilience. Or a mix that grows knit with a friendly grass. Stuff looks amazing for athletic fields, and maybe more forgiving on a hard fall
I could see a boon in long term water conservation and the no-mow alternative means less burning of fossil fuels on just a pretty lawn. Appreciate the spreading of good info.
I like my lawn of clover, onions and crab grass. It’s awesome
Peanut grass is great too. It’s a nitrogen fixer and you can eat the flowers.
The problem is people want a perfect looking yard all of the time. I only water my grass when I’ve planted some new seed, something I don’t do often. When there are drought conditions I don’t care if my lawn turns brown. It will come back when the rain does. I set my battery powered mower to the highest level of cutting and let it mulch the grass so that what moisture is on the ground is shaded and doesn’t evaporate as much. The longer grass also means longer roots to find water and nutrients. The mulching returns nutrients back to the soil. I’ve seeded clover throughout my yard a long time ago. I had noticed that the grass around small clumps of clover was much greener than grass that was further away from clover. Clover is a wonder nitrogen fixer, looks nice, stays green even when the grass has turned brown, and is able to handle traffic. I don’t add any fertilizer or use chemicals to get rid of unwanted things on my lawn. A couple of the neighbours don’t like it because it doesn’t look like a golf course green but they can get lost. My lawn looks great, doesn’t take much work, and the wildlife enjoys it.
Talk to my HOA 😢
I love clover.
I don't want a lawn that has to be hand weeded. That is what they don't tell you about most lawn replacements. You have to weed then on your hands and knees. These are good for small spaces only. It might HELP to suppress weeds, but it really, really doesn't prevent them. I've fallen for lawn replacements before!
Oh maybe! Best to not use chemicals for weeding anyway. I like that this is more eco friendly. We need to be inconvenienced some to protect our local ecology- it’s a small sacrifice
My Dad said as long as it’s green he was happy. I never seen him seed the lawn once in my lifetime.
i also like certain sedges as a good substitute for a traditional grass yard...it does well in shade n wet locations.
Thank you for introducing this plant! Wonderful plant, wonderful presentation! I subscribed
Great!!!! Thank u 🙏🏼
Thanks so much!!! Appreciate you watchin the vids ❤️😎🍻🙏🏼
Wow! Looks like a great alternative to trying to grow a moss garden in dry SoCal.
Dwarf Carpet of Stars IS suitable for zone 9b,10a, 10b, and 11a (OR, ID, UT, NV, AZ, CA)
And Texas 😃
We are currently testing it in other areas… Very hopeful for Florida and South Carolina as well.
@@BudgetPlants I would love to try this in the Florida Panhandle. Our backyard is a horrible sand pit where nothing but sand spurs grow.
Trying to find where I can get my hands on some now.
I can definitely set that up for you. Please feel free to email me directly…
Dominic@budgetplants.com
Thanks!!
It looks like a winner for my community garden!
We have trees that have leaves that fall into our yard and I mean like a gazillion leaves. We typically pick them up using our lawn mower (with a bag attachment), so using a lawnmower on this would be a big no no???
This is beautiful. Too bad it wouldn't survive in my hardiness zone or I'd be really interested in planting it for my front yard.
Same, I'm in Michigan 😔
I was wondering if it would survive my zone’s winter in Nova Scotia. Guess not.
Go for creeping thyme of white clover ! We have done it in Canada and love it so much.
@@forthosewhoiswithGod googling creeping thyme now
@@forthosewhoiswithGod I wish my neighbours weren’t so paranoid about clover, they complain the bees go on it and the kids get stung
Looks great. Got any ideas for those of us who get down to -40F?
I was wondering the same thing
Yeah, he said 20 above and I was like nope!
Same here. Closest I have come is a short buffalo grass which still has grass in it's name....
Creeping Charlie-spreads like a menace. But it’s also an edible mint.
Micro clover. It'll shrink up in sub-zero, but comes back as a low mat in early spring and sticks around until late fall. It's also a nitrogen fixer that puts nitrogen into the world rather than sapping it out like a normal lawn. It does not create a magic weed killing mat, but it also has broad leaves that shade out most weeds or weed grasses.
As it pertains to planting, "very long time" sounds like quite the understatement.
I ended up replacing the grass on the parkway/parking-strip and I am pleased. Mine doesn’t look as lively green as in this video or as it was from the flat but I don’t use fertilizer.
That’s perfect for Japanese gardens and plant in between bamboo!!!
This looks amazing and would be great for my climate (mediterranean: hot dry summmers, mild wet winters) especially it's drought tolerance. Sadly though I can't find anyone selling it anywhere in Australia which leaves me kinda bummed.
The entire area around my house is covered with a “no mow grass substitute.” We call it gravel. It’s hardy from -1000 degrees to +1000 degrees Fahrenheit.
For that dessert-like feel😂
@@GameChanger597 Apple pie with vanilla ice cream?
Thank you for this clearly detailed video on this lawn replacement. Kudos to you for doing the one shown. I'm looking to get a pro to do mine since I'm 80+. Best wishes
Thanks so much 🙏🏼🙏🏼 Yes.. it’s a lot of work, but the result was worth it. Thanks for watchin 😎
@@BudgetPlants Any ideas on how to deal with the Birch Tree (that's in the middle of my lawn) Autumn leaves once I have this ground cover installed? No one mentions this that I can find? Can they be blown off?'
I would not plant Ruschia right up against the base of a birch. Birch trees need regular water, whereas Ruschia is very drought tolerant. I suggest to do a circular cut out around the tree with either metal or composite edging at least 6’ diameter or more. The tree should have a dedicated zone/valve to provide more regular watering than the Ruschia. Hope this helps.
Leaves can easily be blown off. Raking doesn’t work too well.
@@BudgetPlants A HUGE thank you as my lawn area is quiet small and 6' circumference doesn't leave much area for ground cover. You saved me from a huge mistake as I saw that Ruschia is drought tolerant and this amazingly beautiful Birch tree is not. Back to square one. Been trying to get rid of this lawn since 2016 as it's fussy and a money pit and never seems to look great. I guess a less drought resistant ground cover is my next Google search. Thank you very much
@@galleta_2024My pleasure! Here’s a few other options that may work in conjunction with the birch.
Vinca minor
Isotoma
Dwarf Mondo (shade)
Aptenia
Festuca rubra
I have tall fescue. There’s a herd of deer in my neighborhood that takes care of the mowing.
So he said from 20 degrees (I got excited), then he went UP (cue sad trombone). Minnesota says hi.
Other minnesota checking in. Also experiencing zone 4 disappointment.
Kinda sucks for anyone in the north - I'd love an alternative ... I can't mow grass (allergies) and it would save sooooo much time!
Awesome for other areas though!
Same! Wondering if this would survive in the Seattle weather - also in places with 3-5 hours of direct sun.
He said to 20 below F. When late fall is coming I'd get frost fabric and peg it down to protect it. That should be enough.
@@elizd9952 he did? Oh! Lol! Duh, I must have missed that! It’s still not enough BUT your idea of frost cloth is a great one. :)
@@elizd9952 actually he said +20 F - not 20 below
@@krislemmon6649 that was a typo on my part
This is EXACTLY what I'm looking for to replace my lawn, but unfortunately there's no way it would survive the Denver winters.
Thank You, this is what I have been looking for.
keep in mind when shopping for new lawns, this dwarf carpet of stars is amazing in every way EXCEPT that it only lasts 4-5 years and then it will naturally turn very woody and die off and will need to be replanted. that is really the singular bad thing about it. this video covers all of the plus's about it but leaves out the lifespan. happy gardening!
Hi Peter thank you for the insight. I do want to point out though that the information in a particular article saying Ruschia gets woody after 3-5 years in very incorrect. Some of the very first installations here in Southern California took place over a 8 years ago when the plant was first released and are still going strong. Folks can expect a nice lengthy yield from this plant.
@@BudgetPlants thanks for the correction. i read the 3-4year and the 4-5 year life expectancy in multiple articles and websites. im sure it would last longer if properly cared for though i have not personally had any experience with this plant. i am in colorado springs, co. do you think this would grow well here near pikes peak in the rocky mountains? i get about 6hrs of direct sunlight on my lawn per day. thanks in advance!
I love Pikes Peak area! Unfortunately it would not last through the winter in that region. It would freeze and not return. A lot of folks in colder climates like micro clover. I have personally used woolly thyme and that has a fantastic look, similar to Ruschia.
@@BudgetPlants thanks bro ill start looking at that as a possibility.
😎😎🌱
I was ready to rip out my old lawn and put in this Dwarf Carpet of Stars...except that I live in Ohio. Now I'm sad.
I live in Ohio too! 😢
@@teresamckeown5594 team ohio
This looks lovely. Two questions that would help me decide if it's right for my yard: first, how much shade can it handle? My yard is mainly filtered sunlight/shade with a few areas that have almost full sunlight. Also, how long did it take to fill in with the pictures you have of your beautiful yard? Thanks! Great video. :)
I would akso like to know about the shade, kind of an important thing to know🤔
Me too. Will it work under fruit trees, persimmon and orange tree?
This stuff grows all over here in South Florida and yes it grows plentifully at the bases of trees and even under dense tree lines and makes for a very natural and organic looking patch of 'grass' around it, always thought it looked very pretty but never really considered it until I saw this vid. I've seen it grow and flourish just fine under litchee, mango, avocado, orange and even under a large royal ponciana tree which had lots of shade.
I dont have a lawn, but I like this alternative.
I’m in SoCal and had never been this excited about buying a plant haha
I LOVE this! Unfortunately, it isn't suitable for the cold winters we have in the Midwest. I'd be very grateful if you could recommend an alternative that tolerates snow and ice in the winter. Thank You for a great video!
Look into sedum plants! They grow a little taller but could be a potential option.
@@JessicaRuiz323 Thank you!
Check out white clover or mowed yarrow. I'm north of the 49th on the prairies so I know the challenge.
@@njcanuck Thank You!!
Awesome info!!!
Would there be issues under large oak trees that drop a lot of leaves? How long do you think you could leave a solid coverage of leaves before there are issues in it holding too much moisture or not enough light? In st Pete, FL so it can get pretty humid. Also would racking leaves be too aggressive?
I have the same question
We are currently test cases in FL and so far so good. We should have more info by the Fall of 2022. I would say that it would do fair under Oaks so long as there is some bit of filtered light. Leaves would need to be blown off regularly to keep air circulation and to prevent moisture from getting locked in.
@@BudgetPlants Have you started shipping to Florida? What's the minimum $?
How many steps can one spot take a day before it has issues? I'm 160lb and I want to put it in my back yard.
Yes we have just started shipping to FL a few months ago! Ruschia can take pretty regular traffic. I would not recommend running on it or using it as a sports field, but light daily traffic is just fine.
@@BudgetPlants Neat. How do they deal with leaf rakes if someone wants to rake the leaves off it?
Sounds like a realistic alternative. And I'm a major skeptic of everything the left does these days. However, I will give credit where it's due. You have a real plant, it's fixing a massive and real problem. I hear Las Vegas actually banned lawns altogether because the ground water got so bad. And it's not like normal lawns are all that great either. The one I have is half dead and the crows tear it apart regularly. And I really can't be bothered to maintain it.
Impressive plant, they are so flourishing Young girls like them very much.Thanks for your ideas,people will have a beautiful lawn full of green accordingly, I like you video.
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When you find something good to -15 F let me know.
@Nature's Infinite WELLth ok ill look into it. thanks.
@Nature's Infinite WELLth does it take getting walked on?
AMAZING!
This is great video with a lot of helpful information -thanks! Question, how long after putting down a pre-emergent should I wait before planting plugs? Can I plant the plugs right away?
Glad the vid was helpful! So ideally you would plant first, then do the pre-emergent. This will help mitigate weeds in the open soil as the Ruschia takes time to spread and cover.
@@BudgetPlants hi ! What brand of pre emergent do you recommend? I’m in a process of doing it right now. Thank you for the video.
Sure thing. I typically use Ronstar. That’s been good for our installations.
Wow this is awesome! I've been looking for something like this for my mobile home lot in Las Vegas, NV. They are not big on laws because of watering. So they can't really complain on this, I wouldn't think. Thanks!
Thanks for watching! We can definitely ship over to you in Las Vegas…if you would like a quote inquire here!.. info@budgetplants.com
We have a small area beside our house where we can’t figure out what to put there. I will show my hubby this video.
Does anyone deliver this to Texas or sell in Texas?
Salt and wind tolerant? Will this survive Florida’s coastal climate?
Anyone know how well it does in very shady yards? My back yard gets almost zero sun most of the day. The front and side gets 50% to 60% sun.
You might want to consider a moss yard. It's also no-mow and very friendly to feet and pets.
@@DoloresJNurss Does moss yard require watering?
Two questions, will dog urine kill it or turn it brown like grass? Also will gofers eat it?
This sounds PERFECT for denver
Creeping thyme is another good option. Only issue with both is the flowers attract tons of bees and can really suck if a loved one or you're is allergic.
Great video! We just recently installed this in our yard. There is a drip system set up for 2 times a day. Do you recommend watering more than that for the first month?
How has it been doing? Do you still have it?
Hi there! I’m very eager to get this going. When’s an ideal time to get this done?
Hey Christine, I’d recommend to wait until we have cooler weather. I’m thinking by mid-late October would be ok.
I love it! But, it won't survive Michigan winters. Do you have any suggestions for zone 5?
Unfortunately it won’t :( there has been some reports of it being hearty down to about 5°, but I wouldn’t even recommend that… it would probably get major frost damage and not recover. You could go with some thing like a Shore Juniper or Coroneaster.
You could also try creeping thyme. It’s good down to zone 4.
@@BudgetPlants aren't those bushes?
So much prettier than st Augustine love this 💗🧚♀️
When I build my house. This is going to be my lawn.
Kinda looks like moss aha. Cool solution nonetheless
It’s Dwarf ice plant
Kinda sorta...but actually a different genus than Ice Plant. But related (same family).
Thanks for the awesome video! I am in Southern California and just finished planting nearly 2,000 plugs. How much water would you recommend giving the plugs? We’ve heard so many different tips: just mist to moisten to 6-8 minutes per day!
What is the cost? How has this grass alternative faired over these last few months? How much land did the 2,000 plugs cover? Thank you for sharing & your reply.
Great! The first thing to note would be to not let the plugs dry out… They need pretty constant water for the first several weeks, then you can taper back. And after about six months, you are only watering every 7 to 10 days.
@@BudgetPlants Good to know. Thanks!